B/W etching and drypoint on ivory colored cardboard. The single edition of 100 prints.Signed in pencil on lower right margin. Monogrammed and dated on plate. Beautiful impression, in wide margins and in excellent conditions, representing an abstract composition. Embossed stamp of Prandi Gallery, Reggio Emilia (Italy) on lower right corner.

Vasilij Kandinsky (1866-1944), the forerunner and founder of Abstractionism, Vasilij Kandinsky was a wall-decoration teacher at the Bauhaus between 1922 and 1933, firstly in Weimar, secondly in Dessau. The years at the Bauhaus were characterized by his friendship with Paul Klee and by the publication of a fundamental essay: “Point and Line on the Plane”.

With the establishment of dictatorship, Kandinsky was accused of Bolshevism and was forced to leave his country to move to Neuilly-sur-Seine, a suburb of Paris. In Munich in 1937, the famous exhibition of “degenerate art”, with which Adolph Hitler intended to condemn the new artistic avant-gardes, was realized. At this exhibition, 50 of Kandinsky’s works appeared and were eventually sold at auctions with low prices to foreign purchasers.